| You are in: UK | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]()
| Tuesday, 19 September, 2000, 17:05 GMT 18:05 UK Ration warning over fuel panic ![]() Long queues have formed at forecourts around the UK Petrol may have to be rationed if motorists continue to panic buy, oil companies have warned. Unfounded rumours that blockades were about to be reintroduced caused huge queues at garages around the UK. The police, the government and oil firms appealed for calm. The rumours, which started in South Wales, have spread rapidly to other parts of the country, leading to a warning from the Petrol Retailers Association that the situation could become "extremely serious". Police say there are no protests taking place and the oil companies and the Transport and General Workers Union confirm that no blockades have been reimposed.
BP warned that if the panic buying continued, the 46 sites previously designated for emergency only might once again have to be closed to the public. "We are replenishing the network to make sure the levels of stock do not run out again. "The panic buying is putting extra pressure on an already difficult task," said an official. Brown stands firm Police were forced to close some petrol stations in Cardiff after long queues began affecting city-centre traffic. The renewed panic follows Chancellor Gordon Brown's rejection of threats by protesters who said that if there was no action on fuel policy within 60 days they would resume their blockades. Mr Brown said the government would not give in to petrol protesters. "We are not going to make decisions on the basis of deadlines such as this," he said in an interview in The Times newspaper. "We have a process that works - the pre-Budget report and then the Budget." 'Mental queues' Huge queues built up at service stations in Bristol following rumours that there was to be a fresh blockade outside the Avonmouth Docks. Darren Baine, of Avon Police, said there were big queues in the area causing gridlock. "All we can keep saying to people is there is no reason to panic buy, use a bit of common sense and you will be able to get the fuel you need," he told BBC News 24. The panic reaction has forced the ambulance service in the West Midlands to reintroduce its emergency plan. BP in Scotland tried to allay motorists' fears. "There is no substance behind the rumours of disruption to fuel supplies," a spokesman said. "It is business as usual at the Grangemouth road tanker terminal and deliveries are back to normal across Scotland." Supt Doug Adams, head of traffic division of Essex Police, said there were huge queues at petrol stations across the county.
WPC Sharon Newman, of Devon and Cornwall Police, said rumours of fresh disputes were causing panic buying. "Our log describes some queues as 'mental'," she said. "One garage has already closed because it is safer to close than to actually have the queues onto the main road," she said. Cheshire police also appealed to motorists to stop panic-buying fuel. "Cheshire police have a patrol at Stanlow. There is no picket there and we have no knowledge of pickets anywhere in the county," a spokesman said. |
See also: Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top UK stories now: Links to more UK stories are at the foot of the page. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Links to more UK stories |
| ^^ Back to top News Front Page | World | UK | UK Politics | Business | Sci/Tech | Health | Education | Entertainment | Talking Point | In Depth | AudioVideo ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII|News Sources|Privacy | ||